Chapter 8
The Lord Our Dwelling Place
“Lord, thou hast been
our dwelling place in all generations.”
The comfort or discomfort of our outward lives depends
more largely upon the dwelling place of our bodies than upon almost any other
material thing; and the comfort or discomfort of our inward life depends
similarly upon the dwelling place of our souls.
Our dwelling place is the place where we live, and not
the place we merely visit. It is our home. All the interests of our earthly
lives are bound up in our home; and we do all we can to make them attractive and
comfortable. But our souls need a comfortable dwelling place even more than our
bodies; inward comfort, as we all know, is of far greater importance than
outward; and, where the soul is full of peace and joy, outward surroundings are
of comparatively little account.
It is of vital importance, then, that we should find
out definitely where our souls are living. The Lord declares that He has been
our dwelling place in all generations, but the question is, Are we living in our
dwelling place? The psalmist says of the children of Israel that “they wandered
in the wilderness, in a solitary way; they found no city to dwell in. Hungry and
thirsty, their soul fainted in them.” And I am afraid there are many wandering
souls in the church of Christ, whom this description of the wandering Israelites
would exactly fit. All their Christian lives they have been wandering in a
spiritual wilderness, and have found no city to dwell in, and, hungry and
thirsty, their souls have fainted in them. And yet all the while the dwelling
place of God has been standing wide open, inviting them to come in and take up
their abode there forever. Out Lord Himself urges this invitation upon us.
“Abide in me,” He says, “and I in you”; and He goes on to tell us what are the
blessed results of this abiding, and what are the sad consequences of not
abiding.
The truth is, our souls are made for God.
He is our natural home, and we can never be at rest anywhere else. “My soul
longeth, yea, even fainteth for the courts of the Lord; my heart and my flesh
crieth out for the living God.” We always shall hunger and faint for the courts
of the Lord, as long as we fail to take up our abode there.
God only is the
creature’s home; Though rough and straight the road, Yet nothing else can
satisfy The soul that longs for God.
How shall we describe this living dwelling place? David
describes it when he says: “The Lord is my rock, and my fortress, and my
deliverer; the God of my rock; in him will I trust; he is my shield, and the
horn of my salvation, my high tower, and my refuge, my Saviour; thou savest me
from violence.”
So we see that our dwelling place is also our fortress,
and our high tower, and our rock, and our refuge. We all know what a fortress
is. It is a place of safety, where everything that is weak and helpless can be
hidden from the enemy and kept in security. And when we are told that God, who
is our dwelling place, is also our fortress, it can mean only one thing, and
that is, that if we will but live in our dwelling place, we shall be perfectly
safe and secure from every assault of every possible enemy that can attack us.
“For in the time of trouble he shall hide me in his pavilion; in the secret of
his tabernacle shall he hide me; he shall set me up upon a rock.” “He that
dwelleth in the secret place of the most High, shall abide under the shadow of
the Almighty.” “Thou shalt hide them in the secret of thy presence from the
pride of man; thou shalt keep them secretly in a pavilion from the strife of
tongues.”
In the “secret of God’s tabernacle” no enemy can find
us, and no troubles can reach us. The “pride of man” and the “strife of tongues”
find no entrance into the “pavilion” of God. The “secret of his presence” is a
more secure refuge than a thousand Gibraltars. I do not mean that no trials
come. They may come in abundance, but they cannot penetrate into the sanctuary
of the soul, and we may dwell in perfect peace even in the midst of life’s
fiercest storms.
But alas! how few of us know this. We use David’s
language, it may be, but to us it is only a figure of speech that has no reality
in it. We say the things he said, in the conventional, pious tone that is
considered proper when speaking of religious matters. “Oh, yes, the Lord is my
dwelling place I know, and I have committed myself and all my interests to His
keeping, as of course every Christian ought to do. But”—and here one’s natural
tones are resumed—“but then I cannot forget that I am a poor good-for-nothing
sort of person, and have no strength to conquer my temptations; and I can hardly
expect that I can be kept in the perfect security David speaks of.” And here
will follow a story of all sorts of fears, and anxieties, exactly as if the
dwelling place of god had never been heard of, and as if the soul was wandering
alone and unprotected in a world of trouble and danger.
There is a psalm that I call the “Dwelling Place of
God.” It is the Ninety-first Psalm, and it gives us a wonderful description of
what this dwelling place is. “He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most
High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty. I will say of the Lord, he is
my refuge and my fortress; my God; in him will I trust.” Our idea of a fortress
is generally of a hard, granite building, where one would be safe, perhaps, but
also at the same time sadly uncomfortable. But there are other sorts of
fortresses that are soft, and tender, and full of comfort; and this psalm
describes them. “He shall cover thee with his feathers,” just as the mother hen
covers her little helpless chickens in the fortress of her warm, brooking wings.
The fortress of a mother’s heart, whether it be of a human mother, or a hen
mother, or a tiger mother, is the most impregnable fortress the world knows, and
yet the tenderest. And it is this sort of a fortress that the Lord is. “Under
his wings shalt thou trust”: “He shall carry them in his bosom”; “underneath are
the everlasting arms.”
Wings, bosom, arms! What blessed fortresses are these!
And how safe is everything enfolded by them. Nature is full of such fortresses.
Listen to what a late writer says of the tiger mother. “When her children are
born, some power teaches the tiger to be gentle. A spirit she cannot resist, for
it is the spirit of her Creator, enters her savage heart. It is a tiger’s
impulse to resent an injury. Pluck her by the hair, smite her on the flank, she
will leap upon and rend you. But to resent an injury is not her strongest
impulse. Watch those impotent kitten creatures playing with her. They are so
weak, a careless movement of her giant paw will destroy them; but she makes no
careless movement. They have caused her a hundredfold the pain your blow
produced; yet she does not render evil for evil. These puny mites of helpless
impotence she strokes with love’s light in her eyes; she licks the shapeless
forms of her tormentors, and, as they plunge at her, love transforms each groan
of her anguish into a whinny of delight. She moves her massive head in a way
which shows that He who bade you turn the other cheek created her. When strong
enough to rise, the terrible creature goes forth to sacrifice herself for her
own. She will starve that they may thrive. She is terrible for her little ones,
as God is terrible for His.”
We have all seen these mother fortresses hundreds of
times, and have called them Godlike. And one would think that the sight would
have made us fly to our refuge in the dwelling place of God, and leave outside
all fear! But the trouble is, we point-blank refuse to believe that the Bible
means any such good news. Not in words, perhaps, but in effect, we say, “The
Lord’s arms are not so dependable as the strong, loving arms of the weakest
earthly mother; the Lord’s bosom is not as tender as the tiger’s bosom; the
Lord’s wings are not as brooding as the wings of the little mother hen. We know
that all these beautiful earthly fortresses are made and fashioned by Him, but
we cannot believe that He Himself is equal to them. To have Him for our fortress
does not really mean to us anything half so safe or half so tender as to have a
mother for our fortress.” And so mothers are trusted, and God is not!
And yet how safe the psalmist declares this divine
dwelling place to be! Notice how he says, that we who are in this dwelling place
shall be afraid of nothing; not for the terror by night, nor the arrow by day,
nor for the pestilence that walketh in darkness, nor for the destruction that
wasteth at noonday; thousands shall fall beside us and around us, but no evil
shall befall the soul that is hidden in this divine dwelling place; no plague
shall come nigh those who have made God their “habitation.”
All the terrors and all the plagues that have made our
religious lives so uncomfortable, an even so wretched, are provided for here,
and from all of them we shall be delivered, if we make the Lord our habitation.
This does not mean that we shall have no outward trials. Plagues in abundance
may attack your body and your goods, but your body and your goods are not
yourself; and nothing can come nigh you, the real interior you, while you are
dwelling in God.
A large part of the pain of life comes from the
haunting “fear of evil” which so often besets us. Our lives are full of
supposes. Suppose this should happen, or suppose that should happen; what could
we do; how could we bear it? But, if we are living in the “high tower” of the
dwelling place of God, all these supposes will drop out of our lives. We shall
be “quiet from the fear of evil,” for no threatenings of evil can penetrate into
the “high tower” of God. Even when walking through the valley of the shadow of
death, the psalmist could say, “I will fear no evil”; and, if we are dwelling in
God, we can say so too.
But you may ask here how you are to get into this
divine dwelling place. To this I answer that you must simply move in. If a house
should be taken for us by a friend, and we were told it was ready, and that the
lease and all the necessary papers were duly attested and signed, we should not
ask how we could get into it—we should just pack up and move in. And we must do
the same here. God says that He is our dwelling place, and the Bible contains
all the necessary papers, duly attested and signed. And our Lord invites us, nay
more, commands us to enter in and abide there. In effect He says, “God is your
dwelling place, and you must see to it that you take up your abode there. You
must move in.”
But how, you ask, how can I move in? You must do it by
faith. God has said that He is your dwelling place, and now you must say it too.
“I will say of the Lord, he is my refuge and my fortress: my God; in him will I
trust.” Faith takes up the Word of God, and asserts it to be true. Christ says,
“Abide,” and we must say, “I will abide.” Thus we “make him our habitation” by
faith. He is our habitation already, as to His side of it; but we must make Him
so, as to our side of it, by believing that He is, and by continually asserting
it. Coleridge says:
Faith is an
affirmation and an act, That bids eternal truth be present fact.
And we must make the eternal truth that the Lord is
our dwelling place become present fact by the affirmation of our faith, and by
putting on the thoughts and actions that would naturally result from having
moved into the tabernacle of God.
And one of the first things we would have to do would
be to give up forever all worry and anxiety. It is unthinkable that worry and
anxiety could enter into the dwelling place of God; and when we enter there, we
must leave them behind.
We talk about obeying the commands of the Lord, and
make a great point of outward observances and outward duties, and all the while
neglect and ignore the commands as to the inward life, which are a thousandfold
more important. “Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid,” is
one of our Lord’s commands that is almost universally disobeyed; and yet I
question whether our disobedience of any other command is so grievous to His
heart. I am very sure for myself, that I would be far more grieved if my child
should mistrust me, and should feel her interests were unsafe in my care, than
if in a moment of temptation she should disobey me. And I am convinced that none
of us have appreciated how deeply it wounds the loving heart of our Lord, when
He finds that His people do not feel safe in His care.
We can know this by ourselves. Suppose one of our
friends should commit something to our keeping, receiving from us every
assurance that we would keep it safe, and then should go away and worry over it,
as we worry over the things we commit to God, and should express to others the
anxieties about it that we allow ourselves to express about the things we have
put into God’s care. How, I would like to know, would we feel about it? Would we
not be deeply hurt and wounded; and would we not finally be inclined to hand the
thing back into our friend’s own care, and to say, “Since it is very plain that
you do not trust me, had you not better take care of your things yourself?” It
is amazing that God’s own children can dare to be anxious, after once they have
committed a matter to Him; it is such a libel on His trustworthiness. And of
course outsiders judge it in this way, and think to themselves that to have the
Lord for your dwelling place does not evidently amount to much after all, or
those who profess to be living there could not be so troubled.
He who cares for the sparrows, and numbers the hairs
of our head, cannot possibly fail us. He is an impregnable fortress into which
no evil can enter and no enemy penetrate. I hold it, therefore, as a
self-evident truth that the moment I have really committed anything into this
divine dwelling place, that moment all fear and anxiety should cease. While I
keep anything in my own care, I may well fear and tremble, for it is indeed to
the last degree unsafe; but in God’s care, no security could be more
absolute.
The psalmist says: “The name of the Lord is a strong
tower: the righteous runneth into it, and is safe.” The only point, therefore,
is to “run into” this strong tower and stay there forever. It would be the
height of folly, when the enemy was surrounding us on every side to stand
outside of a fortress and cry out for safety. If I want to be safe, I must go
in.
“O Jerusalem, Jerusalem!” said our Lord, “thou that
killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would
I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens
under her wings, and ye would not.” If the little children wants to be safe, it
must “run into” the fortress of its mother’s wings. A great many people stay
outside of God’s dwelling place, because they feel themselves too unworthy and
too weak to dare to go in. What would we think of the little chicken that would
see the hawk coming, would hear the mother calling, and see her outspread wings,
but would stand outside, trembling with fright, saying, “Oh, I am such a poor,
weak, foolish, helpless little chicken that I am afraid I am not worthy to go
under my mother’s wings”? If the mother hen could speak, I am sure she would
say, “You poor, foolish little thing, it is just because you are weak, and
helpless, and good for nothing, that I want you under my wings. If you were a
great, big, strong rooster, able to take care of yourself, I would not want you
at all.” Need I make the application?
But we must not only “run into” our dwelling place.
The psalmist says: “I will abide in thy tabernacle forever: I will trust in the
covert of thy wings”; and we must do the same. This “abiding in his tabernacle
forever” is, I am free to confess, sometimes very hard. It is comparatively easy
to take a step of faith, but it is a far more difficult thing to abide
steadfastly in the place into which we have stepped. A great many people “run
into” God’s fortress on Sunday, and come out of it again as soon as Monday
morning dawns. Some even run into it when they kneel down to say their prayers
at night, and come out of it five minutes afterward when they get into bed. Of
course, this is the height of folly. One cannot imagine any sensible refugee
running into a fortress one day, and the next day running out among the enemy
again. We should think such a person had suddenly lost all his senses. But is it
not even more foolish when it comes to the soul? Are our enemies any less active
on Mondays than they are on Sundays, or are we any better able to cope with them
when we are in bed than when we were kneeling at our prayers?
The question is, Do we want to pay visits only to the
dwelling place of God, or do we want to live there? Do we want to “trust in the
covert of his wings” today, and tomorrow be exposed to the buffetings of our
enemies outside? No one would deliberately choose the latter, but far too many
drift into it. Our abiding in Christ is altogether a matter of faith, but we
fail to realize this. We think our earnest wrestlings or our strenuous efforts
are a large part of the matter; and, when these slacken, our faith weakens. But
if there is one thing more certain than another, it is that the whole Christian
life is to be lived by faith. Without faith it is impossible to please God; and
it is perfect folly to fancy that any amount of fervency or earnestness or
anything whatever of our own doing can take its place; and it is manifestly
useless to waste our time and energy over things that amount to nothing.
What we must do is to put all our will power and all
our energy into faith. We must “set our faces like a flint” to move into the
dwelling place of God, and to abide there steadfastly, let the temptations to
doubt or discouragement be what they may.
“He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High
shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty. Abiding and
trusting are synonymous words, and mean exactly the same thing. While I
trust the Lord, I am abiding in Him. If I trust Him steadfastly, I am abiding in
Him steadfastly; if I trust Him intermittently, I am running into Him and
running out again. I used to think there was some mystery about abiding in
Christ, but I see now that it only means trusting Him fully. When once you
understand this, it becomes really the simplest matter in the world. We
sometimes say, speaking of two human beings, that they “live in each other’s
hearts,” and we simply mean that perfect love and confidence exists between
them, and that doubts of one another are impossible. If my trust in the fortress
of the Lord is absolute, I am abiding in that fortress; and this is the whole
story.
The practical thing to do, therefore, in face of the
fact that God is declared to be our fortress and our high tower, is, by a
definite act of surrender and faith, to put ourselves and all our interests of
every kind into this divine dwelling place, and then dismiss all care or anxiety
about them from our minds. Since the Lord is our dwelling place, nothing can
possibly come to any harm that is committed to His care. As long as we believe
this, our affairs remain in His care; the moment we begin to doubt, we take our
affairs into our own hands, and they are no longer in the divine fortress.
Things cannot be in two places at once. If they are in our own care, they cannot
be in God’s care; and if they are in God’s care, they cannot be in our own. This
is as clear as daylight, and yet, for the want of a little common sense, people
often get mixed up over it. They put their affairs into God’s fortress, and at
the same time put them into their own fortress as well, and then wonder why they
are not taken care of. This is all folly. Either trust the Lord out and out, or
else trust yourself out and out; but do not try to mix the two trusts, for they
will not mix.
It will help you practically if you will put your
trust into words. Say definitely, “God is my dwelling place, and I am going to
abide in Him forever. It is all settled; I am in this divine habitation, and I
am safe here, and I am not going to move out again.” You must meet all assaults
of doubt and discouragement with the simple assertion that you are there, and
that you know you will not be confounded; let other people do as they may, but
you must declare that you at any rate are going to abide in your divine dwelling
place forever. And then, having taken this stand, you must utterly refuse to
reconsider the matter. It is all settled; and there is nothing more to be said
about it.
In all this I do not, or course, mean that we are to
lie in bed and let things go. I am talking about the inward aspect of our
affairs, not the outward. Outwardly we may have to be full of active
carefulness, but it must all be from the inward basis of a soul that has hidden
itself and all its interests in the dwelling place of God, and that is therefore
“careful for nothing” in the beautiful Bible sense of having no anxious
thoughts. To be thus without care inwardly is the surest foundation for
successful outward care; and the soul that is hidden in the dwelling place of
God is the soul that will be able to bear triumphantly earth’s greatest trials,
and to conquer its strongest foes.
There is one point I must not fail to mention. When we
move into a new house, we not only move in ourselves, but we take with us all
our belongings of every sort or description, and above all we take our family.
No one would be so foolish as to leave anything he cared for or anyone he loved
outside. But I am afraid there are some of God’s children, who move into the
dwelling place of God themselves, but who, by their lack of faith, leave outside
those they love best; and more often than not it is their children who are so
abandoned. We would be horrified at a father who, in a time of danger, should
flee into a fortress for safety, but should leave his children outside; and yet
hundreds of Christians do this very thing. Every anxious thought in which we
indulge about our children proves that we have not really taken them with us
into the dwelling place of God.
What I mean is this, that if we trust for ourselves,
we must trust for our loved ones also, and especially for our children. God is
more their Father than their earthly fathers are and if they are dear to us,
they are far dearer to Him. We cannot, therefore, do anything better for them
than to trust them to His care, and hardly anything worse than to try to keep
them in our own. I knew a Christian mother who trusted peacefully for her own
salvation, but was racked with anxiety about her sons, who seemed entirely
indifferent to all religious subjects. One evening she heard about the
possibility of putting those we love into the fortress of God by faith and
leaving them there; and, like a flash of heavenly light, she saw the
inconsistency of hiding herself in God’s fortress and leaving her beloved sons
outside. At once her faith took them into the fortress with her, and she
abandoned them to the care of God. So fully and completely did she do this that
all her anxiety vanished, and perfect peace dawned upon her soul. She told me
she felt somehow that her sons were God’s sons now—no longer hers—and that He
loved them far better than she could, and would care for them far more wisely
and effectually. She held herself in readiness to do for them whatever the Lord
might suggest; but she felt that He was the One who would know what was best,
and she was content to leave the matter in His hands.
She went home from that meeting and called her sons
into her room, telling them what had happened; she said, “You know, my dear
boys, how anxious and troubled I have been about you, and how continually I have
preached to you, and I am afraid have often worried you. But now I have learned
to trust, and I have put you by faith into the fortress of God, and have left
you in His care. I am sure that He will care for you far better than your poor
mother ever could, and will save you in His own way. My anxieties are over.”
I did not see her again for a year, but when I did,
she came up to me with a beaming face; and with tears of joy filling her eyes,
she said, “Rejoice with me, dear friend, that I learned how to put my boys into
the fortress of God. They have been safe there ever since, and all of them are
good Christian boys today.”
The conclusion of the whole matter, then, is simply
this, that we must make up our minds to move into our dwelling place in God and
to take there with us all our possessions, above all, those we love. We must
hide ourselves in Him away from ourselves, away from all others, and we must
lose sight of everything that is outside of Him except as we see it through His
eyes. God’s eyes are the windows of God’s house, and the only windows there are;
and seen through His eyes, all things will put on a new aspect. We shall see our
trials as blessings, and our enemies as disguised friends. We shall be calm and
at rest in the face of all the frets and worries of life, untouched by any of
them. “For he that dwelleth in God dwelleth in a peaceable habitation and in a
quiet resting place.”